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1. Post-Mortem Changes Part2 Rashed Dawabsheh
2. Hypostasis/Livor Mortis
3. Hypostasis/Livor Mortis(lividity or suggilation)
after death occurs, circulation of blood ceases & subsequent movement of blood is by gravity
blood accumulates in the capillaries in the dependent parts of the body ? purple or reddish purple discoloration of the adjacent skin
in pressure areas such as the shoulder blades, buttock & calves ?discoloration will be pale.
starts immediately after death.
apparent after 2 hrs and fixed after 8 hrs.
may not appear at all especially in infants, old ppl and anemic ppl.
4. Hypostasis (cont’d) early hrs after death it appears in the form of blotchy post-mortem hypostasis which usually sinks down and becomes confluent on the most dependant area
once hypostasis is established, there is controversy about its ability to undergo subsequent gravitational shift if the body is moved into a different posture.
Primary hypostasis may either:
Remain fixed
Move completely to the newly dependant zone
Be partly fixed and partly relocated
5. Sites of Hypostasis Depends on the position of the body before death:
Supine:
shoulders, buttocks
heels pressing against surface give white color (pale).
Vertical (hanging):
distally in legs & feet.
Drowning:
chest, upper chest, and upper limbs.
Face-down death:
as in epilepsy, drunken victims
whitening around nose & lips.
Hypostasis may also occur in viscera:
Heart: mistaken for MI
Lungs: mistaken for pneumonia
Intestine: mistaken for hemorrhagic infarction
6. Distribution of Hypostasis
7. Color of Hypostasis
The color of hypostasis is variable and depends on the state of oxygenation at death.
Usual color is blue-pink
It’s a crude indicator of the mode of death:
Cherry-pink: CO poisoning
Dark blue-pink: cyanide poisoning
Brown: methahemoglobinemia
Bronze: septic abortion caused by Clostridium perfringes.
Pallor: anemia, hemorrhage (or normal in extremes of age)
8. Timing and Permanence of Hypostasis Hypostasis appears at variable times after death
May appear half hr to many hrs after death
In the early hrs after death it appears in the form of blotchy post-mortem hypostasis which usually sinks down and become confluent on the most dependant area.
9. Hypostasis vs. Bruises (Ecchymosis)
10. Medico-legal Importance of Hypostasis
Sure sign of death
Cause of death
Time estimation
Position before/ after death
Indicate if the body was moved or not after death
11. Body Cooling/ Algor Mortis the most useful indicator of time of death during the first 24 hours post-mortem.
after death all metabolic activity ceases rapidly (muscles, liver) & circulation stops ? heat production ceases soon after death
The body surface begins cooling immediately after death, followed by delay in deep organs cooling, until a heat gradient is set up between the core of the body and the surface.
Delay ? “temperature plateau”
Plateau = variable: from minutes to 2-3 hours.
In practice the temperature is either measured per rectum or intra-hepatic via an abdominal stab.
The rate of body cooling:
1C/hr in summer
1.5C/hr in winter.
12. Factors affecting Rate of Cooling Surface area of the body:
larger surface area ? speeds up cooling rate.
Children: increase surface area gives rapid heat loss.
Body weight:
Larger bw: slower cooling
Smaller bw: faster cooling
Edema:
slower cooling rate.
Clothing, posture and emaciation.
Environmental Temperature :
Higher humidity: rapid cooling rate
Rapid air velocity: rapid cooling rate
Water:
rapid cooling rate:
More rapid in flowing water than still water
If there is a fulminating infection, e.g. septicaemia, the body temperature may continue to rise for some hours after death.
13. Post-Mortem Decomposition
14. Post-Mortem Decomposition
Putrefaction
Mummification
Adipocrere
Skeletelization
15. Putrefaction
the normal final sign of death.
starts immediately after death at the cellular level
becomes visible in 48-72 hrs.
its onset may be sped up or delayed by several factors mainly:
temperature
humidity.
Two phenomena for putrefaction:
Autolysis: occurs by digestive enzymes released from the cells after death.
Bacterial action: most of them come from the bowel and Clostridium welchii predominates (same bacteria that causes gas gangrene)
16. The 1st visible sign of putrefaction is green or greenish red discoloration of the skin of the anterior abdominal wall
normally starts in the right iliac fossa.
The next phase:
gas formation
blisters containing red fluid appear on the skin, mistaken as bleeding
Humidity, temperature, bacterial activity ? body proteins break into polypeptides & amino acids
Brain &epithelial tissues are the 1st to be affected by putrefaction
Heart, uterus & prostate may survive for longer periods.
Military plaques: nodules in heart (epi/endocardial)
Marbling: bacteria colonize venous system ? hemolysis ? stain.
17. Marbling
18. Influences on Putrefaction A high environmental humidity will enhance putrefaction.
The rate of putrefaction is influenced by the bodily habits of the decedent; obese individuals putrefy more rapidly than those who are lean.
Putrefaction will be delayed in deaths from exsanguination (bleeding to death) because blood provides a channel for the spread of putrefactive organisms within the body.
Conversely, putrefaction is more rapid in persons dying with widespread infection, congestive cardiac failure or retention of sodium and salts.
It tends to be more rapid in children than in adults, but the onset is relatively slow in unfed new-born infants because of the lack of commensal bacteria.
19. Influences on Putrefaction Heavy clothing and other coverings, by retaining body heat, will speed up putrefaction.
Rapid putrefactive changes may been seen in corpses left in a room which is well heated, or in a bed with an electric blanket.
Injuries to the body surface promote putrefaction by providing portals of entry for bacteria and the associated blood provides an excellent medium for bacterial growth.